The AGAHI Awards recognize media ethics to promote coverage that offsets extremist ideologies
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French president to Al Jazeera: Don’t broadcast video of Toulouse shootings
Qatar-based network received edited video of rampage in France; execs will decide whether to air
When is it OK to post personal emails of powerful people?
UK’s Guardian obtains 3000 emails from Syrian ruler & family: read the paper’s logic regarding publication
Debate surrounds NYTimes’s David Carr and the Curator’s code of ethics
Proposed guidelines for aggregation and blogging: a good idea or the “blog police”?
Q & A with Nepali journalist Kishore Nepal on the state of local media
Looking back on 40-year career, Nepal concerned about growing influence of commerce & politics.
First gender-sensitive reporting conference to be held in Pakistan March 8
Study: “The male domination of Pakistani newsrooms is particularly reflected in news coverage of gender base(d) violence.”
NPR releases more comprehensive code of ethics for social media forums
Includes guidelines for re-tweeting, friending sources on Facebook and creating profiles
Persistent media coverage of rape victim in Pakistan raises questions of ethical breach
Sensational stories sell papers, but vulnerable subjects prone to “immeasurable psychological trauma”
Four Liberian papers guilty of ethics violations in sex-scandal reporting
Reporting on alleged sex scandal full of “wild allegations with reckless disregard for the truth”
Is “democratic media” a quaint memory? Let’s talk
When I asked my colleagues what the topic should be for the ethics center’s conference in April, I received an unambiguous reply: media and electoral politics.
The feeling was unambiguous not only because we are in the middle of a presidential campaign. There was another reason. Many citizens are concerned that the idea of fair and free elections, built upon tough but informative campaigns, and analyzed by fair-minded journalists, was not just an idea under pressure. It was an idea in jeopardy.